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If After suffering for seven years, this woman was restored to health by Lydia 13. Pinkliam's Vegetable Compound. Head Iicr letter. Mrs. Sallie French, of Paucaunla, IncL Ter., writes to ilrs. JWnkham: ' I had female troubles for seven years was all run-down, and so ner vou3 I could not do anything'. The 3octors treated me for di fferent troubles but did me no good. While in this con dition I wrote to Mrs. Pink ham for ad vice and took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound, and I am now strong and well." FACTS FOR SICSt WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills, fold has positively cured thousands or Jmmpinvlio havft hpen troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulcera tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bearing-down feeling, flaculency,indiges tion,dizziness,or nervous prostration. "Why don't you try it ? Don't hesitate to write to Mrs. Pinkham if there is anything about your sickness you cvo not understand. She will treat your lettcrinconfideneeandadvise you free. No woman ever regretted writing her, and because of her vast experience sfie lias helped thousands. Address, Lynn, Mass Worked Both Way. John Kendrick Bangs had been con gratulated on the success of his last book. "Thank you," said Mr. Hangs, "and I am glad your congratulations don't work both v&ys." "Work both ways?" "Yes. Like those that were once offered to a man named Urownlow. "A friend said to Brownlow: "'Let me congratulate you. I see by the paper th;it your wife haB pre sented you with twins.' "Brownlow smiled. " 'No,' he said. 'That is a mistake, The father's name Is John C. Browa low. I am John K. Brownlow.' " 'Ah,' cried the other man, heartily then I do, indeed, congratulcte you.' Exchange. DRAGS YOU DOWN. Backache and Kidney Trouble Slowlj Wear One Out. ' Mrs. R. Crouse, Fayette St., Mai Chester, la., says: "For two years my back was weak anC rheumatic. Pains ran through my back, hips and limbs. 1 could hardly get about and lost niucb sleep. The action o the kidneys was much disordered. 1 &-Zr"Ppr bsan using Doan's ' l,,cs& Kidney Pills and the result wa3 remarkable. The kidney action became normal, the backache ceased, and my health is now un usually good." Sold by all dealers. I0 cents a box. Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. The Lest Thing on the LUi. When a man thinks his son isnt likely to be good for anything else, he generally tries to get him to study medicine. IF YOU USE IIAM. BLUE, Get Red Crosa Ball Blue, the best Ball Blue. Large 2 oz. package only 5 cents. At the time he casts his first vote a man is too young to realize that he doesn't know it all. You nlwaya get full value in Lewi' Single Binder straight 5c cigar. Your dealer or Lewis' Factory, Peoria, III. Occasionally a listener hears good of himself after talking into a phono graph. Constipation May be permanency overcome by proper personal efforts vatMKe a$54$tojtce fcftheonc truly beneficial laxative' aedy, Ojrup oj TlgS and Eluir ojooma, remedies, when required, are to assist nature and not to ftupyJant the natur. cd functions, vrudx must depend ulti tttQtcfy upon proper1 nourishment, prepr ef Jovts,awd riKt living generally, lo get its beneficial ejjfecls, always buy the genuine California. Tic Syrup Co. only SOLD Br ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS out sue only, ruUr price 50$ fr Bottle Throat ai;d Lungs awed iamt tf puMutUon ifuui cold and Leaa thml it obtaiaad from Ho Cure. If yw hav a cough at cold, !iht or Tt-iou, begin tak ir.t Pno't Cn todr and coo tin oe ur.iil yon are weU. Cure the couga while it m (rcaii. when a few date of Pio Cure sy ba all thai yoo will need. F&mou foe bif cen tury. Heut to Hwtm. Free boat opiate and harmful inffrecEcaia. At U drugriata". 25 eta. vrucn enable, onclojorm regular habits ctaUy so that assistance w na ture may he gradually dispensed wYtt VvWn no ianter needed astKelscstof PROPER WAY TO GLACE FRUIT. Must Be Perfectly Dry and the Sirup Carefully Prepared. Have the fruit perfectly dry. If or anges, separate carefully each carpel without breaking the skin; stand in a warm place till dry. . Put one pound of granulated sugar in a porcelain lined kettle with a half cupful of water over the fire to boil; do not stir after the sugar is dissolved. After (his has boiled ten minutes try the sirup by taking a small portion on the end of a spocn and dipping it into a cup of cold water and breaking it off quickly; if it is brittle without being .at all sticky it Is just right. The sirup must never be stirred or it will cause granulation. Take quickly from the fire, add a tablespoonful of lemon juice, stand in a basin of boiling water to keep from candying; with a sugar tongs or on the point of a skewer dip the fruit into the sirup, lay on a piece of buttered paper In a warm place to dry. English walnuts and almonds are glaced in the same manner. PASTE MADE FROM PEACHES. Delicious for Sandwiches or Used as a Breakfast Dish. In the south they make a sweet paste out of peaches that is qufle pal atable, says a writer in the Philadel phia Ledger. A peck of ripe peaches are used, which are peeled and mashed. The pulp is then pressed through a coarse sieve. To four quarts of this pulp is allowed one pint of brown sugar. It is mixed well, then cooked for about two minutes. It should be stirred all the time it is cooking. It is spread on plates and put out in the sun to dry. It should be left out for about three days, taken in at sundown, and put out early in the morning. When it looks like leather and lifts up easily from the plate when a knife is put under it, it is done. It is dusted with white sugar and put away for future use. It is deli cious between thin slices of white bread for sandwiches, and is also cat en with hot rolls in the morning. Stuffed Eggs. Boil eggs ten minutes, remove shells, cut in halves. Put yolks into a bowl and mash with a fork until perfectly- smooth. Add a small piece of butter for each egg and work until creamy, then add salt and white pep per to taste, a dash of Worcestershire sauce, a tumblerful of onion juice and a, tablespoonful or two of cream. Last Df all add some finely chopped parsley. Fill the whites, arrange the eggs In a nest of lettuce leaves, and when ready to serve cover with mayonnaise dress ing made as follows: Put the yolks of two eggs Into a cold bowl; beat lightly, add a salt spoonful of salt, a teaspoonful of made mustard, a dash of cayenne pepper, and then add some olive oil, slowly, irop by drop, and thin with the juice of one lemon. Last of all fold in the whites of one egg beaten to a stiff froth. Two eggs will hold a pint of oil, provided a little vinegar is added now and then. For Flatirons. Who has not been vexed to the point of desperation by flatirons that are rough and stick to the starch? Try this, and ironing day will have no terrors. Take a heavy paper or piece of canvas or duck and sprinkle on it half a teaspoonful of powdered pumice stone, add to it a piece of clean lard the size of a hazelnut and rub the iron over this, wiping it off afterward with a soft cloth. This will remove rust from irons also. Onions on Toast. Mince a bunch of onions fine, cover with cold water and set over the fire. When at the boiling point drain and cover again wifh cold water. Boil ten minutes, drain, season with one salt spoon of salt, one-half saltspoon pep per, a small piece of butter rolled in flour, and a few tablespoonfuls of milk Have thin rounds of buttered toast ready and place a spoonful of onion in the center of each. Keep Ham Moist. When cutting a fresh ham, in place of cutting the rind off with every slice, run the knife under the rind as far back as you are going to cut it for the meal every time and lap the rind down over the ham, where you have left off cuttins:. It will always keep moist and will not mold if you do not use it again for several days. It also saves dulling the knife, as the rind is the hardest part to cut. Beets in Sauce. Cook half a dozen small beets in boiling water until the skins will slip off. Drop into cold water, rub off the skins, cut into slices, and these again into narrow strips. Pour on a sauce made from one-quarter cup of butter, half a level teaspoon of salt, a salt spoon or more of pepper, a level tea spoon each of sugar and vinegar, and a few drops of onion juice. Chop Suey Jam. Throe pounds of rhubarb, cut into euiJll pieces; three pounds of granu lated sugar, one-half pint of water, one package of seeded raisins, three oranges with the rind, all cut Into small pieces; a half-pound of shelled English walnuts, cut into small bits. Boil all together for three-quarters of an hour, then put into jelly glasses. Grape Butter. Separate the pulp and the skins of the grapes. Do not boil the skin. Boil only the pulp and strain through a coarse sieve. Mix with the skins aid then measure together. To each quart of grapes add one pint of sugar and cook until thick and jellied. Breakfast Turncake. Three cups of flour, three teaspoon fuls baking powder, one heaping tea spoonful of butter, one cup of milkt Roll cut about an Inch thick and spread on hot griddle. Cover with a basin and turn In ten minutes. Coer again and bake ten minutes more. Keeping House Plants Healtlty. The leaves of house plants shotJd De cleaned with equal parts of milk and lukewarm water, applied gentl with a sponge. This shouM be done at least once a week to keep tb-a lantsia cod bealth. KANSAS STATE TOWS A Brief Review of the Happenings Paragraph for oar Kansas Prison Statistics. The re port of Warden McClaughry of the fed eral prison just Issued, contains a world of facts which are interesting to even the average citizen. The big prison Is a little world all by itself. Briefly outlined the following is the history of the prison for the year. The present population is 747. The ap-prop-iation for maintenance for the fiscal year just closed was $187,500. Expenditures for the same period, $175,792.65; leaving unexpended, a bal ance of $11,707.35. Amount expended for subsistence during fiscal year, $39,207.39. Average number of pris oners fed, 834.01. Average yearly cost per prisoner, $46.50. Average yearly cost of clothing per prisoner, $17.16. Total average cost per prisoner per year, $208.53. During the year ten prisoners died, three were transfer red to asylums and three were par doned. Fifteen had their sentences commuted and 474 were released upon expiration of sentence. There are 42 men under 20 years of age in the pris on and six over 65 years of age. The bulk of the prison population is be tween the ages of 20 and 30 years. There arc five prisoners sentenced for life, five for ten years each and the balance for short terms. The In dian Territory and Texas furnish most of the prisoners. There are 49 foreigners in the prison. There are 114 men serving their second sentences and 22 serving third terms and one doing his seventh term. Of the pris oners 292 are married men and 51 widowers, seven are divorced and nine separated, while 388 are single men which is evidence that the mar ried men keep out of trouble best. One hundred and twenty-six of the prisoners can neither read nor write. Among the prisoners there are 18 bankers, 29 barbers and 12 black smiths. Sixteen are clerks, 15 cooks and 12 engineers, while the greater number, 246 are farmers. Ninety eight are laborers and 28 miners and there is one newspaper artist In the prison and he isn't a cartoonist either. That the prison physician is a busy man is shown by his report. He had 15,451 sick calls during the year and 634 cases were admitted to the hospit al. The death rate was low, only ten out of 634 cases. Five of these were from consumption. The farm ex penses for the year for seeds, stock and everything only amounted to $1, 061.11, yet the crops harvested when estimated at market prices represent a total value of $14,333.50, leaving a total of over $13,000. Good News For the Anglers. The "Angler," the Kansas fish car, has started on its first trip of the year loaded with ten thousand fish. It left the state hatcheries at Pratt over the Rock Island in charge of Del Travis fish and game warden, and will go a3 far east as MsFarland. The first fish will be distributed at McFarland. From there the car will go northwest over the Rock Island as far as Good land and fish will be distributed in the ponds and lakes all along the way. There will be about 150,000 young fish to be distributed this fall, many more than usual. Most of them are bass and croppie. The fish have done bet ter at the hatcheries this summer than ever before. The multiplication was unusually great and the- fish have been doing well. It is the intention of Mr. Travis to distribute all of the young fish this fall. In order to do this he will have to make a number of trips in different sections of the state. As soon as the present trip 13 com pleted the car will be taken out on the following runs, carrying about ten Second Regiment Back at Riley. The Second regiment of cavalry, un der command of Colcnel Frederick J. Ward, has returned to Fort Riley. The regiment marched to St. Joseph, Mo., for the military tournament, im mediately after the maneuvers at Riley. The troops have bfn away from the post a month. Troop A. of the regiment, which remained at the post for duty, left on a 250-mile march to Wichita, where it will take part In the fall festivities. Boy Killed in Mine. Samuel Ski more, a boy of 16 years of age, was killed in the Big Four shaft southeast of Osage City. While at work at the coal face a piece of soapstone weigh ing about a ton, without a bit of warn ing, settled down on him. The pres sure was great enough to smother him but not to break any bones. The deputy mine inspector, William Har ney was Immediately notified. He examined the place and the miners in the shaft and came to the conclu sion that the casuality was one that no human forsight could have pre vented. Farmers Captured Escaped Convict3 Fred Mlshler and Stephen Martin, the two convicts who escaped from the state prison at Leavenworth by sliding down a rope from a window in the top house of the mine, were re captured near McLouth by a posse of farmers, assisted by J. T. Crouch and Officer Durand. The men were un armed and amde no resistance, but tried to get away. They were sur rounded in the woods and shot at seperal times without effect, and were finally corraled and surrendered to the town marshal of McLouth. They WlirHar Cmpiaint Oct. 24. The state board of railroad commissioners have designated October 24 as the date upon which it will hear the com plaint of the city of Altoona against ths Missouri Pacific Railroad compa ny. Thm city complains that it h& no depot although It dos over $40,000 worth of business with the Missouri Pacific each year. The company in reply says the city does not do a fourth of teat amount of freight and tasen?r business combined In a jttr. The issaea fcava been Joined and a Letrl wIU he hld October of a Week Condensed Into Busy Readers thousand fish on each run for distri bution at stations along the different lines of road: Union Pacific, frc-m To peka to Grainfield; Santa Fe, from Strong City to Superior, Neb., from there over the Burlington through, the northwestern part of the state to St. Francis; Santa Fe from Pratt to Kan sas City; Frisco from Kansas City to Fort Scott; Missouri Pacific, Wichita to Fort Scott; Missouri Pacific, Fort Scott to Leoti; Santa Fe, Florence to Great Bend, via. McPherson and Ly ons; Santa Fe, Larned to Jetmore; Santa Fe, Harper to Winfield, Mo line, Elk City, Independence. Coffey ville and Pittsburg. After these trips are completed a few more will be worked out in order to dispose of all of this season's fish. During the fall practically every part of the state will be visited. Warden Travis says there is little likelihood that any Hun garian pheasants will be distributed this year because ofvan increase in the cost of their importation. Those im ported a year ago have multiplied rapidly and are doing well. Mr. Tra vis received reports from points over the state frequently that large flocks of them have been seen. These birds are protected for five years and the indications are that by that time the state will be pretty well filled with them. Mr. Travis will import several hundred blue quails this fall. They will come from New Mexico. These quail are game little birds and are z.a good eating as the ordinary quail. Each bird has a top knot. These birds are already to be found in Western Kansas where they have come from the West of their own accord, but Mr. Travis wants to get them distributed over the eastern half of the state. In Regard to Registration. It will be a relief to many voters to know that by failing to vote at the. primary election they did not lose their right to vote a the general election. There was some fear on this ground and to quell it all Attorney General Jackson rendered an opinion holding that the primary was not an election at all, that it was simply a primary and that it had nothing to do with the registra tion of voters in cities of the first and second class. The opinion reads. "The primary election law has abso lutely nothing to do with the general election laws of the state, and conse quently the "registration of electors in cities of the first and second classes. The primary law requires registration to vote at the primary, but the general election laws do not require one to vote at the primary in order to vote at the general elec tion. The primary of August 4 was not an election at all. It was just a primary. The registration law re quires an elector to vote at each, gen eral election and to reside at the same street rumber or tc re-register, but as the primary is not a general election, it is of no conseqnencs whether an elector voted at the pri mary or not. Putting this matter in another . and perhaps in a simpler light, if a voter has not changed his residence and has voted regularly at the annual city elections in the spring and the biennial elections in Novem ber, he dees not need re-registration. And as for the primary law forget it, until the time comes to nominate can didates again." $100,000 to Be Spent at Riley. Notice has been received at Fort Riley that the plans for a hundred thousand dollars' worth of construc tion work at the post are being made and that bids will be advertised for within a few weeks. ChHdTTegCuT"o McClain, who lives west of Concordia about eleven miles, was mowing sorg hum his 4-year-old boy wandered oul into the tall feed and was struck by the machine, cutting one leg off so that it hung by a shred of flesh only, and cuitting several deep and ugly gashes in the other. Emporia Grocers on the Carpet. J. Kleinhans, state food inspector, dropped into Emporia and stirred things up among the grocery men who have not been living carefully up to the letter of the food laws. After making an inspection of a number of stores in the center of town Klein hans had warrants served on seven grocery men for violating the law. All seven are charged with selling goods for containers bearing the advertise ment of goods of other manufacturers from those sold. Kleinhans says only a minimum penalty will be imposed when the cases are heard In justice court. The cases were brought, he says, to serve as an example to the merchants that they must keep to the letter of the law. were taken back to the prison in shackles and will be punished accord ing to the prison rules. Woman Accidentally Shot. Mrs. Isaac Hall accidentally shot and killed herself at her home fifteen miles south of Greensburg. The family had been visiting a neighbor and on returning home Mrs. Hall started to carry the revolver into the hous where it was in some manner dis charged, killing her instantly. This is the third similar accident for this community within a few months. Galena Streets Caves In. The ground under the homes of Mrs. A. B. Hubbard and William Pollock at Galena caved In and left one house hanging on the brink of the chasm. The Hubbard family was awakened by the falling of the plaster of their home and escaped hsfore the biggest part of the cave-In occurred. Nearly one-third of the Pollock house was overhanging a hole more than forty feet deep when the family was awak ened. The Pollock home Is across the street from the " Hubbard hcxae. Mins shifts cs.-zz2l ti. cave-la. - OPPONENT EASY TO BEAT. Slight Accident Put Edmonia's Rival Out of the Running. Mrs. S. was in. a Richmond hos pital, and she was lonely, so welcomed the advent of a very black and very .anguid maid, who came in one morn ng to wipe up the floor. Some one new to talk to, so no time was lost, "I have not seen you working here Defore. Aren't you a new girl?" Edmonia willingly let the cloth slip back into the bucket, and sat fiat upon .he floor before answering. "Yas'm, I's new. I's jest washin dp de floor; but I don't work, I's ed likated." "And where were you educated?" was the next question. "In a seminary." Then, with a burst jf confidence: "There was me an' an other girl workin in a house. She was cook and I was chambermaid, and we had great times about who would git de prize, but I beat." Then, after a pause, "She was easy to beat, 'cause she got smothered to death with gas 3e night before de 'zaminations come Dff." Harper's Magazine. Laundry work at home would be much more satisfactory if the right Starch were used. In order to get the desired stiffness, it is usually neces sary to use so much starch that the beauty and fineness of the fabric is hidden behind a paste of varying thickness, which not only destroys the appearance, but also affects the wear ing quality of the goods. This trou ble can be entirely overcome by using Defiance Starch, as it can be applied much more thinly because of its great er strength than other makes. Animal Food. Doctor (upon finding his patient weaker than before) What does this mean? Haven't you been following my instructions? Patient (feebly) Yes, doctor. Doctor Been eating animal food right along," have you? Patient (grimly trying to smile) Well, doctor, I tried to, but some how it did not seem to agree with me very well. I managed to worry down the hay and the clover tops all right; but the thistles kind of stuck In my throat, and I had to give it up. Judge. GIRL WAS DELIRIOUS With Fearful Eczema Pain, Heat, and Tingling Were Excruciating Cuticura Acted Like Magic. "An eruption broke out on my daughter's chest. I took her to a doctor, and he pronounced it to be eczema of a very bad form. He treated her, but the disease spread to her back, and then the -whole of her head was affected, and all her hair .had to be cut off. The pain she suffered was excru ciating, and with that and the heat and tingling her life was almost un bearable. Occasionally she was deliri ous and she did not have a proper hour's sleep for many nights. The second doctor we tried afforded her just as little relief as the first. Then I pur chased Cuticura Soap, Ointment, and Pills, and before the Ointment was three-quarters finished every trace of the disease was gone. It really seemed like magic. Mrs. T. W. Hyde, Brent wood, Essex, England, Mar. 8, 1907." Why He Went Back to His Old Tricks "You ingrate!" exclaimed the irate Judge, addressing the culprit; "this gentleman took a fatherly interest in you after you had promised to stop stealing, and he gave you a job in his store, did he not?" "Yes, sir!" "And when he left you alone In the place one day you repaid his gratitude by sneaking behind the desk and rifling the cash drawer, didn't you?" "Yes, sir." "Now, why did you do this?" "I got remorse of conscience. Judge!" . . Johnnie's Position. "Yes," began Mr. Peters, Sr., "John Peters, Jr., has quit school and ac cepted a position in Davis general store." "Indeed!" commented the summer visitor. "What are his duties?" "He is superintendent of the crack r and xheese department," replied Mr. Peters, Sr., with guarded satis faction. "He has the entire charge af wropping up the cheese." Youth's Companion. How's This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any se of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHEXEY & CO.. Toledo. O. We. the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney or the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly hon trable in all business transactions and financially ble to carry out any obligations made by his firm. Waloimg. KiyxAM A Marvin. Wholesale Druepists. Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken internally, acting llrectly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the jystem. Testimonials sent free. Price 75 cents per ottle. 55oid by all Dnnreteta. Take Hail s Family Fills for constipation. The Last Straw. Caesar was about to enter Rome tn triumph. Just as he was climbing into his chariot Cicero yelled In his ear: "Step lively, please!" Angrily tearing up his transfer, the great conqueror got out at the next crossing. Illustrated Sun day Magazine. TO DRIVE OCT MALARIA AKI BUILI IP THE SYSTEM, rake the Old Standard GROVE 8 TASTKLK33 CHLLL TONIC. Too know what yon aro taking. The formula is plainly printed on every bottla. showing itis simply Quinine and Iron in a tasU-ieas form, and the most effectual form. For grown people and children. SCc Cheap Labor in Ceylon. The wages of the coolies who raise tea in Ceylon vary from 8.23 to 11.66 cents a day. Ther are. however. he-used free, and get rice at cost ; price. Instant Relief for All Eyes, that are irritated from dust, heat, sun or wind, PETTIT'S EYE SALVE, 25c. AH druggists or Howard Bros., Buffalo, X. Y. At some period In a man's life he firmly believes that all his friends have conspired to injure him. r The Old Standard GROVE'S TASTKU2SS CHILI, TONIC, drives out Malaria and builds tip the f system. You know vrhi you are taking:. The formula is plainly printed ou every bottle, showing it ! 13 Eisiply Qarrune and Irca in a tasters, fend th nest effectual form. For adults andchildren. 50c. ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT ANVgetable Preparation For As similating the Food and Reg uia ting rhe S tomachs and Bowels of t UlrH Si glMitl q J tl Promotes DigesfionCheerful nessandRcst.Contains neither Opium .Morphine nor Mineral Not Nar c otic PumfJttn Sttd - j4x Sna KetkeUt Softs -'Atis SuJ fppermiitl -iCariaUSiUi harm Sttd -C.rSttJ Suf tttnkryreen flavor. A perfect Remedy for Constipa tion . sour oiomacii.uidi 1 uuta Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ness and LOSS OV SLEEP Fac Simile Signature of Te Centaur Company, NEW YORK. mm Guaranteed under the Food and, Exact Copy of Wrapper. fP1 Lot Uo Send Yoo a Pachago of with your next order of. groceries and I will guarantee ! H5' Ten Years Hsnce. Three young men were discussing that awful thing called the future. "I'll be content," said one, "if, in ten years from now, I have $1,000,- 000." "Fiddlesticks!' exclaimed the sec ond, "you want too much. If I have one hundred thousand ten years from now I'll be happy." - The third was a solemn, slow-mannered youth, seldom aroused to ex citement. Now, however, he aban doned his recumbent posture on a bed and sat upright. "Fellows," he drawled, "we'll all be lucky, if, ten years from now, we have the price of a square 'meal." Which entirely broke up the serious nature of the discussion. FELLOW CLOTOES ARE UNSIGHTLY. Keep thero white with Red Cross Ball Blue. All grocers sell large 2 oz. package, 5 cents. The wise man who has a good opin ion of himself keeps it to himself. Lewis' Single Binder costs more than other 5c cigars. Smokers know why. Your dealer or Lewis' Factory. Peoria, Iu. It's a pity some people can't marry for brains instead of money. Mrs. WlnsloTrs Soothing- Syr op. For children teething, softens the Tunis, reduces In flammation. aUays pain, cures wind colic. 2oc a bottle. The love of money is the easiest of ill roots to cultivate. Fft Ache tTse .Allen's Foot-Eane Orrr30.0G(J testimonials. R?fus imitations, feendfol free trial package. A. S. Olmsted. Le Uoy. Ji. Y. A successful man, isn't necessarily a contented man. 'Kill a j$ Molarfa Mokes Pal' J llil For Infants and Children. The Kind You Havs Always Bought Bears the Signature of For Over Thirty Years 111! TM CEMTAUR OODMIIT, HEW TOMS OUT. caw , r jv In At$ Use that you will be better satisfied with it than with any starch you have ever used. I claim that it has no superior for hot or cold starching, and It Will not Stick to the Iron No cheap premiums are given with DEFIANCE STARCH, But TOXJ GET OKE-THTRD HOBS fok tottk mosey than of any other brand. DEFIANCE STARCH costs 10c for a lG-oz. package, and I will refund your money If it slicks to the iron. Truly yours, llcxEsr Jcrmr, The Grocer; maa Positively cured by these Little Pills. They also relieve Dis tress from Dyspepsia In digestion and Too Hearty Eating-. A perfect reaa edy for Dizzlneaa, Nss sea. Drowsiness, Bs4 Taste in tbe Mouth, CoaV ed Ton (rue. Palm la thm Side, TOKPH LIVTTK, They regtila-te the Bowels. Purely Vegetable SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE. Genuine Must Bear Fac-Simi!e Signature REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. LIVE STOCK AND flIISCEXJLANEO US Electrotypes m GREAT VARIETY FORj BALK ,AT THE LOWEST PRICES BY WESTEKN NEWSFAPEU UNION Kanaas City, Missouri Broom Corn Shippers cr Broom Corn Association Correspond with us. We want Broom Corn. COYNE BROTHERS ICO South Water Street, Quick Answer. CHICAGO PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM CleaBM end beantiAas t S.fr ProooiM a Inxvna&t t nit, N over Falls to Sestoiw Gray Hair to its Toothful Color. Cure Kalp dimM m hair r 0e.ndl-Wat Dnivrr pA LIFORKIA Abalo Pearl Shell JewcbT KoTel designs. FinelorChristnuLapreaeoMk Bwl 2e stamp for eatalopne. Responsible arenta waaSea. If afflicted with auza cj oaa W. N. U WICHITA, NO. 42, 180S. SIGH CARTER'S vllTTLE I j IVER PILLS. CARTERS rilTTLE 1 1 IVER I PILLS.